Asus has slashed the price of its 32-inch ProArt PA329CV 6K monitor to $895, making it one of the most affordable professional-grade displays with top-tier color accuracy and connectivity. Targeted at content creators who need pinpoint color precision and reliable out-of-the-box performance, this monitor blends a sharp 6016 x 3384 resolution with 98% DCI-P3 and full sRGB coverage-perfect for studios that demand consistent color fidelity.
Asus ProArt PA329CV 6K monitor specifications
- 32-inch IPS display
- 6016 x 3384 resolution (6K)
- 98% DCI-P3 color gamut
- 100% sRGB coverage
- Thunderbolt 4, HDMI, DisplayPort, USB-C, USB-A, 3.5mm audio jack
Thunderbolt 4 is a standout feature here. It not only lets you handle data and power over a single cable, but also allows daisy-chaining two monitors-a big win for creative professionals who dread cable clutter. While Dell and LG offer strong competitors in this tier, Asus distinguishes itself by focusing not just on specs but on delivering a calibrated display that’s ready to go straight from the box.
ProArt PA329CV price and competitive positioning
The current $895 price tag is $404 less than its regular $1,299 cost. That reduction pushes this ProArt display from a premium luxury into a genuinely accessible tool for professionals. In the realm of 32-inch monitors with professional-grade color accuracy and versatile ports, this is a compelling value proposition. Usually, discounts in this category are rare, as buyers negotiate based on budget lines rather than deals.

Professional-grade monitors often force a trade-off: either pay substantially more for brand-name reliability and convenient features or accept compromises in color accuracy and port selection. Asus’s steep discount looks less like a sale and more like a strategic push to capture undecided buyers before they gravitate to high-profile rivals like the Apple Studio Display or more utilitarian options from Dell’s lineup.
For international buyers, this puts Asus in direct competition with well-known monitors such as the LG UltraFine 32UN880-B and Dell UltraSharp U3223QE, which also offer excellent color coverage and USB-C connectivity but typically lack native 6K resolution. Asus’s offering stands out with its resolution and Thunderbolt 4 ports, which are still relatively rare in this price bracket.
With this aggressive pricing, Asus is likely aiming to stake its claim in the growing market of content creators who want professional color fidelity without the premium Apple tax. The real test: whether they can sustain this pricing or if this is a limited-time push to change consumer perception.

